WWII drama set in Tunisia. Five American soldiers become separated from their unit without radio communicationWWII drama set in Tunisia. Five American soldiers become separated from their unit without radio communicationWWII drama set in Tunisia. Five American soldiers become separated from their unit without radio communication
Photos
Fred Gavlin
- Sgt. Clemens
- (as Fredric Gavlin)
Jack B. Sowards
- German Lieutenant in American Uniform
- (as Jack Sowards)
Robert Weston
- Rescue Soldier with Picture
- (as Bob Weston)
Robert B. Williams
- German in American Uniform
- (as Bob Williams)
- Director
- Writer
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaOpening credits: All events, characters, firms and institutions in this photoplay are fictional and any similarity to any persons, living or dead, or to any actual events or to any actual firms or institutions is coincidental and unintentional.
- GoofsThe squad is attacked by an enemy plane and Pvt. Slade is supposedly fatally wounded, but as he lies in the dirt, it's perceptible that he's still breathing; also, his eyelids flutter. Pvt. Russo rushes over and lies on top of Pvt. Slade, feeling for a pulse and declares "He's had it" and tears off the dog tag.
- Crazy creditsOpening credits prologue: The footsoldier knows only the battles fought, on the ground they walk . . . . .
- ConnectionsReferenced in The Diary of a High School Bride (1959)
Featured review
This "B" war film has "A" credibility for realistic drama in war.
A typical motif done well. The motif is a small unit of soldiers stuck behind enemy lines.
There is a lot going for this film. A good script is the chief reason. We get some realistic emotion in a situation of deadly danger that is no game.
Best of all, we get a "roll the dice" or "let the cards fall where they may fall" story here. There's no "contrived Hollywood predictability of bullets only finding good guys and underlings. There's no "ticket" to immortality by being the usual creep, officer, or man with a secret that means a bullet can't find you. The bullet or grenade can hit anyone at any time.
In other words, the viewer doesn't feel like the writer and director is prancing around behind the hill. It's a "natural and uncontrived" chain of events.
Which sets this apart from the usual Hollywood formula movie that owned the industry after about 1965. Cleverly done, which is probably why the bubble boys won't care for this one.
A typical motif done well. The motif is a small unit of soldiers stuck behind enemy lines.
There is a lot going for this film. A good script is the chief reason. We get some realistic emotion in a situation of deadly danger that is no game.
Best of all, we get a "roll the dice" or "let the cards fall where they may fall" story here. There's no "contrived Hollywood predictability of bullets only finding good guys and underlings. There's no "ticket" to immortality by being the usual creep, officer, or man with a secret that means a bullet can't find you. The bullet or grenade can hit anyone at any time.
In other words, the viewer doesn't feel like the writer and director is prancing around behind the hill. It's a "natural and uncontrived" chain of events.
Which sets this apart from the usual Hollywood formula movie that owned the industry after about 1965. Cleverly done, which is probably why the bubble boys won't care for this one.
Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
- Language
- Also known as
- Hell Squadron
- Production company
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
- Runtime1 hour 4 minutes
- Color
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 1.33 : 1
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